Fuente: Science News
  Expuesto el: jueves, 03 de mayo de 2012 19:12
  Autor: Science News
  Asunto: Study keeps pace with Greenland glaciers
| Herky-jerky motion suggests    worst-case sea level rise unlikely Web    edition : 2:12    pm 
 Glaciers    like Greenland’s Jakobshavn Isbrae (shown) are expected to contribute less to    rising sea level during this century than worst-case scenarios had    envisioned.Ian    Joughin, © Science/AAAS Time-lapse snapshots    showing Greenland’s glaciers racing toward the sea in recent years have    turned up some good news, and some bad news. As the island’s glaciers    disintegrate over coming decades, they won’t raise the world’s oceans as much    as the most pessimistic forecasts had shown possible, researchers report in    the May 3 Science.    But the blocks of ice are still melting rapidly and may contribute worrisome    centimeters to sea level rise by the end of the century. “We’re certainly looking    at significant rises in sea level, but some of the worst-case scenarios that    people have imagined don’t seem likely,” says glaciologist Twila Moon of the    University of Washington in Seattle. Moon’s team used    satellite measurements from 2000 to 2011 to clock the speeds of more than 200    outlet glaciers — flowing tongues of frozen water that carry ice away from    the vast ice sheet that blankets most of the country. Where the glaciers    extend offshore, they tend to fall apart and dump ice into the ocean.        Some of these icy conveyor    belts have already been spotted moving — and thus melting — faster in recent    years. A 2008 study in Science    estimated how much such acceleration might contribute to rising sea level. If    every glacier could suddenly zip along as quickly as the ultrafast glacier    Jakobshavn Isbrae, about 14 kilometers per year, sea level would rise about    half a meter by 2100, researchers found. A more realistic doubling of speed    between 2000 and 2010, followed by leveling off, would contribute a smaller    rise of about 9 centimeters. “We were trying to set    some really firm upper limits on sea level rise using values that seemed    within the realm of possibility,” says glaciologist Tad Pfeffer of the    University of Colorado at Boulder, a coauthor on the 2008 study. The new data show that    glaciers as a whole haven’t accelerated that much, or that uniformly, from    winter to winter. On average, they moved about 30 percent faster at the end    of the first decade of the 21st century than they did at the beginning. Some    moved at a constant velocity the whole time. Others floored it for the first    five years, then put on the brakes — or vice versa. Large changes in speed    happened quickly and often. “We don’t know what    caused the speed changes,” says Leigh Stearns, a glaciologist at the University    of Kansas in Lawrence who wasn’t involved in the new study. “Neighboring    glaciers are behaving very differently, and that’s confusing.” Examining this    complicated variability could help scientists figure out how landscapes,    ocean temperatures and other factors drive the motion of glaciers. Looking ahead, Moon    cautions that 10 years is still a relatively short record, and that the    future of Greenland is difficult to predict. Speeds could continue to pick    up, she says, putting the glaciers back on track for 9 centimeters of sea    level rise.   
 
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